Dear MARMAM community,

We are pleased to share our recent publication in PLoS ONE titled “Aquaculture 
related humpback whale entanglements in coastal waters of British Columbia from 
2008–2021”.

Abstract

Over the past two decades, increasing numbers of humpback whales have been 
returning to feed in the inshore waters of British Columbia (BC) where marine 
aquaculture farms are situated. This has led to growing concerns that the 
presence of aquaculture farms may pose an entanglement threat to humpback 
whales. However, it is not known whether aquaculture facilities attract 
humpback whales, or whether there are factors that increase the likelihood of 
humpback whale, becoming entangled and dying. We examined eight reports of 
humpback whales interacting with Atlantic salmon farms in BC from 2008 to 2021 
to evaluate the conditions that may have contributed to their entanglements. Of 
the eight entangled humpbacks, three individuals died and five were 
successfully disentangled and released. All were young animals (1 calf, 7 
subadults). Multiple factors were associated with two or more of the reported 
incidents. These included facility design, environmental features, seasonality, 
humpback whale age, and feeding behaviour. We found that humpback whales were 
most commonly entrapped in the predator nets of the aquaculture facilities (6/8 
incidents), and were less often entangled in anchor support lines (2/8). The 
presence of salmon smolts did not appear to be an attractant for humpback 
whales given that half of the reported entanglements (4/8) occurred at fallowed 
salmon farms. Almost all of the entanglements (7/8) occurred in late winter 
(prior to the seasonal return of humpbacks) and during late fall (after most 
humpbacks have migrated south). Overall, the number of humpback whales impacted 
by fish farms was small compared to the numbers that return to BC (> 7,000) and 
accounted for <6% of all types of reported entanglements in BC. Human 
intervention was required to release humpback whales at fish farms, which 
points to the need to have well-established protocols to minimize entanglements 
and maximize successful releases.

It is available open-access here: 
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0297768 
<https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0297768> 

Citation

Storlund RL, Cottrell PE, Cottrell B, Roth M, Lehnhart T, Snyman H, et al. 
(2024) Aquaculture related humpback whale entanglements in coastal waters of 
British Columbia from 2008–2021. PLoS ONE 19(3): e0297768. 
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0297768 
<https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0297768>

All the best,
Rhea

Rhea Storlund, MSc
PhD Candidate (Zoology)
Marine Mammal Research Unit
Traditional xʷməθkʷəy̓əm Territory
The University of British Columbia
r.storl...@oceans.ubc.ca <mailto:r.storl...@oceans.ubc.ca> 
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